Budget cuts force IRS to pay whistle-blowers less

Wednesday

Mar 6, 2013 at 2:00 AM

WASHINGTON — The federal government's automatic budget cuts mean there will be less financial incentive to turn in tax cheats. In a notice on its website, the Internal Revenue Service said it would pay 8.7 percent less to informants who blow the whistle on tax-dodging individuals or corporations.

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The federal government's automatic budget cuts mean there will be less financial incentive to turn in tax cheats. In a notice on its website, the Internal Revenue Service said it would pay 8.7 percent less to informants who blow the whistle on tax-dodging individuals or corporations.

The payments are being reduced because of the spending reductions required by the across-the-board cuts known as sequestration that kicked in Friday, the IRS said.

The IRS pays bounties that can be as much as 30 percent of the taxes, penalties and interest the agency collects in the case. The office said it pursues information on significant tax-dodging, with higher payments for cases involving more than $2 million in unpaid taxes.

In one of the largest whistleblower awards in U.S. history, the IRS paid $104 million to convicted financier Bradley Birkenfeld last year for informing on thousands of former clients.

The IRS says it paid 128 whistle-blower awards totaling $125.4 million in the 2012 fiscal year. The agency collected $592.5 million in those cases, meaning the awards amounted to 21.2 percent of the money collected.

For the rest of 2013, the IRS says it will calculate how much money would have been paid to an informant under the previous rules, then reduce the amount by 8.7 percent.

Under the automatic budget cuts, the IRS' $125 million informant payment budget for the rest of this fiscal year will be reduced by $6 million, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget.

The whistle-blower payment cut, along with other reductions at the IRS, would lead to "fewer tax return reviews" and "a reduced capacity to detect and prevent fraud," then-acting Treasury Secretary Neal Wolin wrote to Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., last month.

"In recent years, each dollar spent on the IRS has returned at least $4 in additional enforcement revenue," Wolin said. "Thus, each dollar the sequester cuts from current IRS operations would cause a net increase to the deficit, as the lost and foregone revenue would exceed the spending reduction."